Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Senate candidate files lawsuits over ballots, voting machines

- Patrick Marley

MADISON – A Democrat running for U.S. Senate filed a pair of lawsuits Tuesday alleging Wisconsin election officials aren’t keeping ballots secret in some cases and are not properly vetting voting machines.

In one case, Peter Peckarsky asked a Milwaukee County judge to order the state Elections Commission to bar Milwaukee and other cities from marking absentee ballots with numbers that could reveal how individual voters cast their ballots. In the other case, Peckarsky is seeking to force the commission to more thoroughly scrutinize voting machine software.

Most communitie­s in Wisconsin count their absentee ballots at polling places, but Milwaukee and about three dozen other municipali­ties count theirs in one location. State law requires those that count them in one spot to write the poll list numbers of absentee voters on the back of their ballots.

Both the ballots and poll list numbers are available under the state’s open records law. That could lead to members of the public figuring out how individual voters cast their ballots, violating the state’s guarantee of secret ballots, Peckarsky argues in one of his lawsuits.

Whether that could actually happen is not clear.

Milwaukee blacks out the poll list number on ballots when people make public records requests. That prevents anyone from decipherin­g how others vote. Whether all other communitie­s follow the same practice is unknown.

Peckarsky is seeking to invalidate the law requiring election officials to write poll list numbers on absentee ballots. That would ensure no one’s votes are publicly disclosed, he argued in one of his lawsuits.

About 40 communitie­s use central counting locations for absentee ballots, including Milwaukee, Brookfield, Franklin and Menomonee Falls.

The second lawsuit argues the commission is not following a state law that requires the commission to keep copies of voting machine software. The lawsuit

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says the state keeps the software with an escrow company instead of retaining it itself.

Peckarsky also contends the commission isn’t following a state law that requires it to ensure ballot tabulators can detect errors.

Few major errors have been found with voting machines in Wisconsin. A nonpartisa­n legislativ­e audit released in October found they worked properly in 2020. Hand recounts that were conducted in some counties in 2016 revealed no major discrepanc­ies in vote counting.

Peckarsky is making a longshot bid in a crowded Democratic primary that will decide who can challenge Republican Sen. Ron Johnson of Oshkosh.

Correction­s and clarificat­ions

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